
Sean
Old English makes a cleaner and a scratch hider. I used to use the scratch hider to wipe the dust off my Phonos. It almost looks like they used a ammonia to clean the cabinet? I am wanting to put this one in my cylo-phone cabinet where it's not seen by anyone but me. But I still would like it to be right, but at the same time don't want to make it worse. I am one of those guys who's afraid to mess with one that's this close to being correct. I wish they wouldn't have used what ever it was to wipe it down.OrthoSean wrote:I'm only aware of DARK and LIGHT Old English. I've never seen anything other than those two, so inquiring minds would ask, what other colors would it come in and where can you find it? I've always considered Old English to be more like stain. I've seen many, many lighter colored phonographs where dark OE was applied and it doesn't come off.![]()
Sean
What'd you use, Photoshop???Amberola wrote:I have got it to this shade. Think I will stop.
BEFORE
AFTER
Don't get mad, that's why I left the background out. It is getting to the point where I will put a real picture of it on when it is dark enough. It's almost there, but my house smells like gasoline.Mr Grumpy wrote:“There's an old saying in Tennessee — I know it's in Texas, probably in Tennessee — that says, fool me once, shame on... shame on you. Fool me... you can't get fooled again.”
―Abraham Lincoln.